Maya Leggat, the Hunter College student who was shoved in front of a train in White Plains, says that she’s humbled by all the support she’s getting and that “all this love makes my stupid broken legs feel so much better.”

“I’m in awe of all the support everyone and more are giving,” Leggat wrote Tuesday on her Facebook profile, her first public comments since the incident Sept. 25 at the White Plains station. “I am shown everyday the loving face of humanity in friends and in strangers and it humbles me. I have so much love for you all because of all the love you give, and all this love makes my stupid broken legs feel so much better.”

Leggat, an English major at Hunter College, is recovering at Westchester Medical Center. Rods, plates and screws binding her left leg didn’t keep the straight-A student from trying to rejoin a class last week via Skype from her hospital bed.

Her father, Robert Leggat, said her fighting spirit helped save her life, though her recovery is expected to take months.

Maya Leggat was standing alone on the platform awaiting a train to Manhattan and reviewing coursework on her Kindle when she noticed a stranger nearby. Moments later, he stepped behind her, grabbed her waist and threw her into the path of the oncoming train, according to the father, who has spoken with authorities about the attack. Video surveillance footage from the station shows the man — a homeless man named Howard J. Mickens — pushing Maya Leggat onto the tracks, officials have said.

She was struck by a northbound train and thrown about 30 feet beneath the platform.

Both her legs were broken and her left ring finger was severed. Her family calls it a miracle that she wasn’t run over by the train.

Robert Leggat said two MTA officers quickly jumped down from the platform and were able to find his daughter because they heard her yelling for help.

She remained alert as they applied a tourniquet to her leg, he said.

Mickens, 39, of White Plains is charged with attempted murder and is being held at the Westchester County jail.

Family friends, meanwhile, are helping raise funds for her extensive medical care, setting up a fundraising website, care4maya.com, that has raised about $21,000 toward a $100,000 goal.